Disquieted in a sentence as an adjective

It disquieted me a little but I didn't challenge it - I figured, if the lawyers say it's OK, then it's OK.

"You are disquieted at the level of privilege displayed.

Maybe I'll be disquieted not by being overrun by the creep of new gadgets, but by looking around and seeing a completely foreign anthroposphere.

I'm somewhat disquieted by these admissions, and I think that eventually there are going to be some social networking privacy scandals.

You're not disquieted by a privacy regime that works or doesn't work depending on who you are and how your politics comport with those of the people running the services you use?

No, and perhaps that is why I and many others continue to be somewhat disquieted with Apple's stewardship of its Mac platform: It would take much more to make me switch.

I admit that I would probably continue to be disquieted by a horrifying appearance and would struggle to remember that such an entity had a life of the mind.

The problem we have with this entire subject is that most people are not willing to engage with it too seriously because they are disquieted by the idea of mortality itself.

Google's ability to do that to individual sites, selectively, at their sole and unchallengeable discretion, has me go from disquieted to terrified some days.

It is also possible to be disquieted by detention and due process provisions in a war powers act while simultaneously understanding the context in which a reasonable person could assert them.

I'm generally a big defender of Google but even I am disquieted by their maneuvering around Google+.However, I also doubt it's possible to build services as sophisticated as GMail on direct payments from users.

Sterling had a position that appears to have involved the utmost level of trust --- he wasn't a sysadmin disquieted by the documents he was uncovering, but an operations officer intimately familiar with and actively participating in the operation he revealed.

Disquieted definitions

adjective

afflicted with or marked by anxious uneasiness or trouble or grief; "too upset to say anything"; "spent many disquieted moments"; "distressed about her son's leaving home"; "lapsed into disturbed sleep"; "worried parents"; "a worried frown"; "one last worried check of the sleeping children"

See also: distressed disturbed upset worried